Angus mac Óg, Angus mac Óc, Angus mac Ócc, Angus mac-ind-Óg, Angus Óengus Óc, Angus of the Brug
[Irish, young Angus, Angus son of youth; mac Óc, mac Óg, young son]
Angus Óg is the god of youth and beauty among the Tuatha Dé Danann; he may also be the god of love, if any such god can be said to exist. His father was the Dagda and his mother Boand (the Boyne River), while she was still married to Nechtan. To hide their infidelity, the parents asked Elcmar to be the child's foster-father. In a lesser-known version, Eochaid Ollathair (Dagda) seduced through trickery the wife of Elcmar, Eithne
In a widely known story Angus Óg is wasted by longing for a beautiful young woman he has seen only in a dream. The Old Irish version is known as Aislinge Óenguso [Irish, The Dream of Angus], while the modern version is known as Angus agus Cáer [Irish Angus and Cáer]. When she disappears from his dream, Angus Óg searches for her for a year; later, Bodb Derg discovers that she was Cáer, daughter of Ethal Anbúail. When the lovers are joined, they fly off together to Brug na Bóinne in the form of a pair of swans, chanting such wondrous music that no one who hears it can sleep for three days and three nights.
Angus Óg is the Irish counterpart to Continental Celtic divinity Mabon-Maponos. Scholarly speculation has made him the counterpart of such classical figures as Adonis, Apollo, and Eros (Cupid). Because Angus Óg displaced his father, some commentators have suggested that he might be the counterpart of Zeus in displacing Cronus.
See Françoise Le Roux, ‘Le Rêve d'Oengus’, Ogam, 18 (1966), 132–50. Christian-J. Guyonvarc'h, ‘Le Rêve d'Oengus’, ibid. 117–31. Angus Óg has been a popular figure with Anglo-Irish writers. See W. B. Yeats, ‘The Song of the Wandering Aengus’ (1897) and ‘The Harp of Aengus’ (1900); Liam O'Flaherty, The Ecstasy of Angus (1931). In James Stephens's The Crock of Gold (1912), Angus Óg, calling himself ‘Love’ and ‘Infinite Joy’, contends with the Greek Pan for the favour of the young heroine; see also Stephens's In the Land of Youth (1924).




